Live Review: Preservation

Northeast Performer Magazine
-Scott Chesley: Nov, 1998 Live Review

Photos by Janet Caliri

BOSTON ROCK OPERA – PRESERVATION
Tower Auditorium, Mass College of Art
Boston, MA — October 1, 1998

Ray Davies’ Preservation, a rock opera originally released as two separate albums (Act’s I and II) in the early ’70s, had not been staged anywhere since the Kinks toured with it in 1974. Until now, that is. Having performed a portion of the cutting, political / social-satire work in 1993, The Boston Rock Opera began discussions with Davies about the possibility of a full production. Impressed with the troupe’s ability to effectively translate his ‘lost lifelong project’ to the stage, Davies gave the group his blessing to continue work on a script. The final product incorporates music from both original albums, and tells a timeless tale of good and evil, ultimately drawing attention to the often-subjective interpretation of both.

With Preservation the BRO appears to have taken their work to a higher, more streamlined level. Whereas their presentations of The Rocky Horror Show, Crackpot Notion, Sgt. Pepper, Jesus Christ Superstar, and more recently the cabaret-style Night At The Opera showed a fertile, yet still developing organization finding their feet, Preservation has raised the stakes with its delightful performances, fine-pacing, streamlined choreography, and deft meshing of story and music. A true opera, in the sense that all dialogue is contained in the musical numbers, it is to BRO’s great credit that the subtleties of Ray Davies’ tale are not lost in the telling.

Preservation’s story:

In the Village, an idyllic place set in Anycountry, Mr. Flash (Mick Maldonado), a ruthless, power-hungry real-estate baron has seized control of the government, bribing and coercing all who oppose his immoral, self-serving ways. Appeasing the town leaders with gifts and favors, he is able to maintain a firm grip on the commerce of the village and the lives of its inhabitants. Unable to stand up to his evil ways, the village slips into an intoxicating haze of apathy and decadence. Out of this general malaise, the opportunistic Vicar (Marty Barrett) and Activist (Lynette Estes) begin to rally the good people of the village to fight back against the evil Mr. Flash. Backing the conservative Mr. Black (Brian Gottesman), a striking figure given to pious platitudes about the ‘common good’ and tirades against the weakness of the people, the Vicar organizes a party to battle the ranks of Flash. Aided by the creepy Mad Scientist (Jim McKay), a sinister character with designs on total mind-control, Black’s opposition party gains strength and divides the Village.

Meanwhile, the only citizen not caught up in the fray, the voice of reason, The Tramp (Peter Moore), speaks out on a soapbox in the center of town, admonishing the people that they are caught in an age old battle and that neither side offers peace or truth. Flash, sensing that his precarious empire is cracking, lashes out at the Tramp, having his henchman beat him senseless while the crowd looks on in bewilderment. Retiring to his flat, Flash falls asleep and is visited by a spirit who forces him to realize that his ways are wrong and that only by renouncing his wickedness can he achieve goodness and prevent Mr. Black from seizing control of the people’s minds and free will.

Flash attempts to confess his change of heart to his girlfriend Belle (Kay Hanley), who, having tired of his cheating, sinful ways, informs him that their relationship is over. At this moment Black’s men, who force him to the Mad Scientist’s lair, where he is to be cleansed by the newly developed mind-control helmet, abduct Flash. Unable to resist, Flash is quickly relieved of his free will and ability to influence the people of the town. With Flash out of the way, Black is free to initiate his ominous plan for the future, and a mass cleansing ceremony is organized for the entire village. One by one the townsfolk are led through the ‘cleansing archway’, and finally, as The Tramp and good lady Genevieve (Kaci Carr) are forced through, the disturbing prospect of Black’s vision becomes reality; the Village has been ‘cleansed.’

The songs comprising Preservation run the gamut from the pastoral ditty Sitting In The Midday Sun, performed to carefree perfection by The Tramp (Peter Moore), to the flat out rock of Flash’s Demolition, to the countrified blues duet of Belle and Tramp’s Scrapheap City. With many strong ensemble numbers and exceptionally inspired individual performances from Mick Maldonado, Marty Barrett (The Vicar), and Peter Moore, whose teetering town drunk repeatedly stole the show, the BRO breathed a vibrant life into Davies exceptionally relevant rock commentary.

John Whiteside and producer Eleanor Ramsay’s simple, yet elegant and effective set design worked in dramatic complement with Whiteside’s subtle stage lighting. Although utilitarian and practical, the combination succeeded at depicting a number of separate locations within the Village. As always, the BRO’s band was razor sharp and ran through Ray Davies’ material with a rollicking abandon. Dan Millen’s lead guitar work was especially satisfying, inspired and raunchy in the best Dave Davies style, while band leader Matt Thorsen anchored the proceedings with rock solid acoustic rhythm guitar.

Costume designer, the inimitable Animal X, adorned the cast with appropriately tacky, bright, somber, and sullen garb, creating a tantalizing visual spectacle, colorful and flashy. Under her skilled hand, Flash waxed sleazier, Genevieve shone brighter, and Mr. Black oozed shiny, viscous oil.

With the staging of Preservation, the Boston Rock Opera has proved, if there was any doubt, that in the relatively unexplored world of rock opera Performance Theater they are peerless. Each successive production has trumped the last, and if the maxim that success begets success holds true, Boston will be made richer by their vital, delightful endeavors for a long time to come.

©1998 Northeast Performer Magazine

Few Kinks to Work out in BRO's fine 'Preservation'

There are few kinks to work out in BRO’s fine ‘Preservation’
–by Dean Johnson/Music Review | Boston Herald |10/03/98

“Preservation,” a two-act rock opera by the Boston Rock Opera Company
at Tower Auditorium, Mass. College of Art,
Fridays and Saturdays through Oct. 17.

Human nature never changes, and the proof is in the Boston Rock Opera company’s production of Kinks frontman Ray Davies’ “Preservation.”

Until this week, “Preservation” hadn’t been performed in its entirety since the Kinks last performed it in 1974. But the piece, dubbed “a morality play” by its author, is in many ways more contemporary now than when it was written.

A onetime honorable man (Mr. Flash) has become a corrupt businessman and politician who is opposed by the superpious Mr. Black, who favors mind control to legislate his own particular brand of morality. As the two forces clash, the little people are caught in the middle.

The setting is the imaginary Village. It might as well be Washington, D.C. Everyman is portrayed by the Tramp, the only one who makes any real sense. He watches all the madness without getting involved and ultimately is the only one to escape with wits and integrity intact. Because the production hasn’t been performed in nearly a quarter of a century, the only real precedent for the BRO are the two “Preservation” albums recorded by the Kinks.

The group is true to the spirit of Davies’ original music — so true that the Tramp (Peter Moore) and Flash (Mick Maldonado) sound uncannily like Davies in places.

Moore plays the Tramp with a carefree, loose-limbed grace a little reminiscent of the Scarecrow in “The Wizard of Oz,” while Maldonado’s Flash is a wonderfully unctuous soul, in part, perhaps, because Davies has said Flash has more of him than any other character in the production.

Other standouts are Brian Gottesman as an insidious Mr. Black and Letters to Cleo singer Kay Hanley, who vamped it up as Flash’s girlfriend Belle.

Though Thursday’s opening performance had its share of technical glitches (dead mikes, missed lighting cues, unbalanced singers-vs.-band sound levels), it was an fun night, especially for Kinks fans.

Davies’ original tunes range from feisty pop and raging rock to English dance hall ditties, with a little country and western thrown in. The music, particularly ensemble numbers such as “Here Comes Flash,” “He’s Evil” and “Money Talks,” holds up well. And “Sweet Lady Genevieve” is as wistful and sweet as anything he’s written.

Jane Bulger’s choreography and Eleanor Ramsay’s direction add enough action and visual appeal to flesh out the story. But like any opera, the music carries the real message.

Even Davies, who took in last Sunday’s dress rehearsal, was impressed. His response to seeing his onetime pet project brought to life onstage for the first time in nearly 25 years:

“It was worth the wait.”

Who are we to disagree?

(c) 1998 The Boston Herald

Reviving a Piece of Music History

‘Preservation’- minded:
Boston Rock Opera gets its Kinks by reviving a piece of music history

— by Dean Johnson Boston Herald: 10/01/98

Could there be anything more terrifying for a small theater group than seeing the renowned author of the work you’re performing show up at an early dress rehearsal?

It happened to the Boston Rock Opera company Sunday. The 5-year-old nonprofit group was prepping for Friday’s debut of the Kinks’ rock opera “Preservation,” when Kinks front man Ray Davies popped into the Tower Auditorium at the Massachusetts College of Art to check out the production.

The 23 cast members — including Letters to Cleo lead singer Kay Hanley — “were freaked out,” according to BRO producer and director Eleanor Ramsay. “Some of the people in the cast are big Kinks fans,” Ramsay said, “so they were really nervous. Having the author there, no matter who it is, is pretty nerve-racking.”

They needn’t have worried. The next morning Davis had nothing but kind words for the cast.

“It’s a very energetically and dynamically presented production,” he said. “They did a grand job.” In this case, there was good reason for a little extra pressure — and Davies’ interest.

“Preservation” has never been performed in its entirety since the Kinks toured with it in 1974. Hollywood, European companies, supposedly even Ray’s brother Dave, the Kinks’ lead guitarist, have all asked to do it over the years, but Davies shot them all down. Until now. The BRC staged a portion of “Preservation” five years ago and began a dialogue with Davies. “I’ve known about this company’s work for several years,” Davies said, “and they’ve been very persistent in trying to get ‘Preservation’ put on properly, and they believe in the piece.”

“I encouraged them to do it,” he said, “because I feel they have a genuine affinity for the piece and its music, and though I’m not that involved with it, I’ve given them my blessing to do the production as they see fit.”

The work, which Davies called “a documentary myth,” is replete with corrupt politicians on one side, the extreme religious right on the other, and the little people caught in the cross fire. “What I found interesting is that it parallels so many contemporary situations,” Davies said. “My politicians are kind of extreme good or bad, and it resonates in so many ways with things happening today that I hope,” he quipped, “this is a step towards resurrecting this every time an election comes around. It should be treated as a kind of fairy tale and a hard-edge documentary.”

Meanwhile, hard-core Kinks fans are treating this production as one of the highlights of the end of the century. According to Ramsay, the BRO has been contacted by folks from Germany, England, Venezuela and the West Coast, all determined to take in the production. Like traditional opera, there is no dialogue. Ramsay admitted that she dropped five songs from the original work as well as passages and verses in other songs. But Davies didn’t complain and even offered more editing that the group just couldn’t fit in with its imposing deadline.

“Eleanor’s choice was to let the music speak without too much explanation,” he said. “I found that if you’re attentive and listen, like any opera if you don’t speak its language, you still get the gist of what it’s about. I was amazed at how much text is really in the music. “It’s actually rekindled interest in the work,” he said. “You tend to leave things behind, but this project has reminded me that I was writing something more than a rock album when I made it.”

The two albums that make up the complete opera, “Preservation Act I” and “Preservation Act II,” have recently been released with bonus tracks on the Velvel label. Though Davies is finishing off a choral piece because of a premiere in England next month and a full-fledged stage production, “Come Dancing,” being readied for the London stage next year, he isn’t ready to say the Kinks are finished. “I’d love the band to play again,” he said. “It’s such a great band. But I only want to do shows and records because we have good new music. I don’t want to appease people who want to see old hits. I think the band has to be alive and play new music to work, and we’ll decide all that next year.”

The BRO’s production of “Preservation” could also stretch into next year. Though the Boston run is slated to end Oct. 17, Ramsay said there are discussions of bringing it first to New York and then to London. It could even be part of the prestigious Edinburgh fest next summer.

If Kinks fans are beside themselves because “Preservation” is coming to life again, Ramsay may have more good news for them in the future. She’s already considering taking on the Kinks’ “Soap Opera” for the BRO.

The Boston Rock Opera’s production of “Preservation” will be staged tomorrow, Saturday, Oct. 9, 10, 16 and 17 at Tower Auditorium in the Massachusetts College of Art, Boston, at 8:30 p.m. Tickets: $10-$15. Call (617) 423-NEXT.

(c) 1998 The Boston Herald

Boston Rock Opera: Preservation Acts

Music Reviews The Boston Phoenix : October 8 – 15, 1998

Boston Rock Opera: Preservation Acts
— Jonathan Perry

Longing for a mythologized past and contempt for a morally bankrupt present have always been dual preoccupations at the heart of songwriter Ray Davies’s work with the Kinks. Nearly a decade before he wrote his two-part dystopian nightmare of political corruption and greed dubbed Preservation Acts 1 and 2, Davies chronicled class hypocrisy and the unsavory secret impulses of the teetotaling bloke next door in “A Well Respected Man.” Then, six months later, he released the playful, life-of-leisure ditty “Sunny Afternoon.”

For its 1998-’99 season opener, Boston Rock Opera is presenting, for the first time, both acts of the Preservation saga in a version that throws Davies’s lifetime obsessions under the stage lights in lavish fashion. This production, which kicked off last weekend, will run the next pair of Friday and Saturday nights (October 9 and 10, 16 and 17) at the Massachusetts College of Art’s Tower Auditorium. Davies himself was so pleased with BRO’s 1993 production of Act 2 that he consulted with the group’s co-founders, Mick Maldonado (who plays the corrupt real-estate baron Mr. Flash and is the new production’s music director) and Eleanor Ramsay (producer, director, set design), on the new script and dropped by the rehearsals.

If a special press performance of the rock musical a week ago Thursday provided any indication of what’s in store, Davies has to be grinning. Not only has BRO’s production done satisfying, faithful justice to his darkly brilliant vision, in some ways it outshines the original albums. As grandly ambitious as they were, save for a smattering of classic and should-be classic songs, Acts 1 and 2 were, on album at lleast, ultimately uneven projects — inferior to works like 1969’s The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society, which served as the blueprint for a subsequent Davies rock opera. In BRO’s hands, the songs, dialogue, and characters leap from dusty obscurity to vivid, three-dimensional life, at once funny and sad and tragic, with all Davies’s original intentions intact.

A dynamic cast of more than two dozen actors, dancers, musicians, and behind-the-scenes personnel expertly deliver the tale of an epic battle between Good and Evil and how it’s sometimes difficult to tell the difference. Maldonado is perfect as the thuggish Mr. Flash, who takes control of the Village and turns it into his own “vulgar playground.” In truth it’s kind of hard not to root for the unscrupulous degenerate who eventually gets his comeuppance, since (1) you can see that the supposedly righteous leader-in-waiting, Mr. Black (played with fascistic Moral Majority glee by Brian Gottesman), is a very bad dude who’s probably a lot more dangerous than the more obviously crooked Flash, and (2) Flash and his henchman throw a better party thanks to the fantastic eight-piece band led by Matt Thorsen. Plus, Flash has Letters to Cleo’s Kay Hanley (Belle) on his arm — that is, until he gets caught sharing some bubbly with one of the floozies.

The unwitting center of this apocalyptic storm-a-brewing is the Tramp — who’s essentially Ray Davies. The Tramp vacillates between just wanting to be left alone to sit “in the midday sun” and lamenting a world of selfishness where “nobody gives anymore.” Expertly played by Count Zero’s Peter Moore, he doesn’t want to have to choose between Flash and Black, since either way he and everybody else in the Village get screwed (i.e., turned into mindless zombies à la A Clockwork Orange). In other words, to cop a line from one of Davies’s rock-opera-writing contemporaries, “Meet the new Boss, same as the old Boss.”

(c) 1998 The Boston Phoenix

Preservation – A Rock Opera by Ray Davies


Preservation remains one of Boston Rock Opera’s most successful and best received shows. We are proud to have had the chance to stage this work.

PRESENTED
October 2, 3, 9, 10, 16, 17, 1998
at the Tower Auditorium at the
Massachusetts College of Art, Boston MA

Mick Maldonado as Flash and
Kay Hanley as Belle


Featuring: Mick Maldonado as the morally bankrupt Mr. Flash and Brian Gottesman (Chucklehead) as his nemesis; the neo-conservative Mr. Black. Kay Hanley (Letters to Cleo) plays Flash’s long-suffering gal-pal Belle, Peter Moore (Count Zero, BRO) is The Tramp and Kaci Carr (Janet in BRO’s Rocky Horror) is Genevieve. John Surrette (The Deniros) is Spiv, Marty Barrett (The Orange Show!) is The Vicar, performance artist Jim McKay is The Mad Scientist and veteran BRO performer Lynette Estes is The Activist. There’s a cast of 23 and a 7 piece band.

The story unfolds in The Village. The Tramp, a wandering Everyman, has returned to reclaim his lost love. During his absence, Mr. Flash, a ruthless real-estate baron and thug, has seized control of the government and rules by intimidation. Not content to suffer in fear and degradation under Flash the people seek a new saviour in Mr. Black, a conservative moralizer with a dark vision of a population “improved” by mind control. A battle of will escalates, the line between good and evil greys, and human frailty and excess spells doom for all.

Jesus Christ Superstar (2000)

“Boston Rock Opera’s “Superstar” is gripping — again” — Boston Globe

Presented November
9, 10, 11, 12, 15, 16, 17, 18, 2000
Tower Auditorium, 621 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA

Featuring:

Chris Mascara as Jesus Christ
Gary Cherone as Judas Iscariot
Valerie Forgione as Mary Magdelene
Peter Moore as Pontius Pilate
Mick Maldonado as Caiaphas
Pat McGrath as King Herod
Karin Parker as Simon Zealotes
T Max as Annas
Brian Gottesman as the Priest
John Surette as Peter
Also Featuring: James McCann, Danielle Riley, C. Moon Mullins, Bo Barringer, Michael Bidwell, Jennifer Truesdale, Paula Morris, Elaine O’Rourke, Deborah Emmons, Lisa McColgan, Stan LeRoy, George Bonin, Amanda White, Bree Greig

The Fates: Kristen Kissik, Rachel Morales, Susan Oziemblewski, Jenna Hussey

The Band:
Suzi Lee, Bill Bracken, Joel Simches, John Rapoza, Cathy Capozzi, Larry Dersch, Carol Namkoong

Produced by Eleanor Ramsay
Directed by John Whiteside + Music Direction by Mick Maldonado & Suzi Lee + Choreography by Kristen Kissik + Costumes by Sarah Chapman & Penney Pinette Lighting design by Max Azanow + Set Design by Eleanor Ramsay

Rehearsal shots by Carolyn Corella.

Jesus Christ Superstar was presented through special arrangement with Music Theatre International, 545 Eighth Avenue, New York, NY 10018.
Originally produced on Broadway by Robert Stigwood and MCA, Inc. by special arrangement with David Land.
Original Broadway production conceived by Tom O’Horgan

‘Preservation’ is packed with power Globe 1998

Boston Globe: Living | Arts
STAGE REVIEW
‘Preservation’ is packed with powerBy Jim Sullivan, Globe Staff, 10/05/98 | The Boston Globe Online | Boston.com

IIt has been Boston Rock Opera’s mission, since its 1993 inception, to dust off, kick up, give respect to, and sometimes tweak the rock operas and story-songs of the past, such as ”Jesus Christ Superstar,” the Who’s ”A Quick One While’s He’s Away,” the Beatles’ ”Sgt. Pepper.” The company held a one-off performance of the Kinks’ ”Preservation Act 2” at the Middle East its first year. And it’s back with the full-blown ”Preservation” – a slightly edited composite of Acts 1 and 2 – at Tower Auditorium at Mass. College of Art. (Composer Ray Davies consulted with director Eleanor Ramsay and contributed several ”author’s notes.”)

The stage is mostly spare – three towers, four-tiered steps – and pretty much has to be to accompany the ever-swirling singers and dancers coursing through. It is directed by Jane Bulger and Ramsay, who with Mick Maldonado is Boston Rock Opera’s co-founder.

It’s a busy two hours of rockin’ theater. Glamour, greed, political scheming, science gone too far, socialism gone awry, and absolute power doing what it tends to do. At the start, the suave, yet brutal and duplicitous Mr. Flash (Maldonado) presides over the ”village.” Ah, but discontent is brewing. An everyman called the Tramp, a semidrunken sage played regally by Peter Moore, is our tour guide. Flash is challenged by the Mephisto-like smoothie, Mr. Black (Brian Gottesman), who gives lip service to creating a class-free society, but links up with the Vicar (Marty Barrett) and the Do-Gooders to stamp out smut, invoke censorship, and clamp down on personal freedom. With the aid of the Mad Scientist (spindly-legged Jim McKay), he turns Flash and the rest of the village into zombies. One by one, the townfolk pass through an arch and are jolted with a ray of brain-draining radiation. Flash’s girlfriend, the floosie-with-a-heart-of-gold Belle (Kay Hanley), goes kicking and screaming – and emerges zombified. Only the Tramp escapes. Poor Mr. Flash. After breaking down, proclaiming ”I’m everything that I once despised,” and recovering a semblance of humanity, Flash gets zapped. Cruel world. The shell-of-Flash and Mr. Black lead the new coalition government.

Thematically, ”Preservation” is one of Davies’s best works – both broad and intimate, politically savvy and righteously pessimistic. Everything sounds glorious – major chords rip from the eight-piece band, walloping crescendos abound, singers get to tear into their roles – but that’s just Davies’s way of writing uplifting songs about dire situations. Rottenness consumes this village and taints its hapless people. Davies warns of the pressure to conform; he touts the plight of the often-trampled common man; he believes politicians have only power and their pocketbooks in mind. Davies hammers away at the right-wingers; he zings the lying lefties.

”Preservation” is packed with strong songs. ”He’s Evil,” sung at each other by the warring Black and Flash camps, was brilliant. The Tramp’s cynical history lesson, ”Nobody Gives,” was dynamic – Moore ended the song in a ball on the floor, stomped by Flash’s men. Flash and Belle’s swan song, ”Nothing Lasts Forever,” brought a tear. The finale, the faux-triumphant ”Salvation Road,” is a joy to behold. Everyone except Mr. Black believes they’re marching off into a merry future.

There is a lot of action in this production, as with any BRO event. On stage, it’s a hurly-burly populated not just by the politicos but by schoolgirls, ”do-gooders,” henchmen, workers, businessmen. It seems like a cast of thousands (23, in fact) and it takes some work to keep everyone straight. Occasionally the miking was erratic. The first act is a rather long table-setter – most of the drama, conflict, and best songs come in the second act. But, taken either bit by bit or as a whole, ”Preservation” is a delight. It’s a mess out there in the village, but it sure feels good in the audience.

This story ran on page B06 of the Boston Globe on 10/05/98. © Copyright 1998 Globe Newspaper Company.